[labnetwork] Bending coaxial
Garry J. Bordonaro
bordonaro at cnf.cornell.edu
Wed Dec 17 12:05:20 EST 2014
>From a knowledgeable piping person:
“Bending is the best way to go. Less welds, less chance for particulate contamination and virtual leaks, quicker installation, cheaper to install.”
Garry J. Bordonaro
Microlithographic Engineer
Cornell NanoScale Facility
250 Duffield Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853-2700
(607) 254-4936
<mailto:bordonaro at cnf.cornell.edu> bordonaro at cnf.cornell.edu
<http://www.cnf.cornell.edu/> http://www.cnf.cornell.edu/
From: labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu [mailto:labnetwork-bounces at mtl.mit.edu] On Behalf Of Matthieu Nannini, Dr.
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2014 11:33 PM
To: labnetwork at mtl.mit.edu
Subject: [labnetwork] Bending coaxial
Dear colleagues,
A local company is proposing to bend coaxial SS tubing to install a double containment gas line thus removing the need for welded 90° elbows. did you ever see that ? Any comment would be helpful !
Thanks
Matthieu Nannini
Début du message réexpédié :
De: "Matthieu Nannini, Dr." <matthieu.nannini at mcgill.ca>
Objet: Bending coaxial
Date: 15 décembre 2014 15:31:10 UTC−5
À: Tom Britton <tbritton at criticalsystemsinc.com>
Hi tom,
A local company here can bend coaxial tubing. They quoted me 4800$ for the 2 lines BCl3 and SiCl4.
What do you think of bending ? They told me the 1/4 wasn’t kinked at all.
Matthieu
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